The Atlantic

The Complicated Cliché of ‘Bran the Broken’

<em>Game of Thrones</em>,<em> </em>which always commented on the social effects of disability, ended by selling its final twist as inspirational.
Source: Macall B. Polay / HBO

This story contains major spoilers for the series finale of Game of Thrones.

“A boy born broken, raised to see himself not as disabled, just different.”

That’s how a newscaster described Oscar Pistorius in an uplifting segment on the South African runner before he became the first double-leg amputee to compete at the Olympics (and quite before he was convicted of killing his girlfriend). I came across the clip in a documenting popular media’s obsession with portraying disability as something to be “overcome,” a trope that doesn’t so much help viewers understand people with disabilities as it does turn them into inspirational tchotchkes. There’s even a term that disability activists use for this sort of portrayal: the “.”

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